Peripheral inflammation implicated in Parkinson’s disease

A new study reveals a surprising role for LRRK2 gene mutations, which are implicated in Parkinson’s disease (PD) and account for 40% of familial PD cases among North African Arabs1.

Both genetic predispositions and environmental factors act in concert to develop the neurological disorder where nerve cells in specific areas of the brain undergo degeneration. Previously, scientists had difficulty dismantling the exact mechanisms by which LRRK2 contributes to PD development. Now, a new study in Brain2 is offering some answers.

During testing, the scientists induced a systemic inflammation that mimics a bacterial infection in mice carrying the most common mutant form of the human LRRK2 gene. The induction stimulated the peripheral immune cells that reside outside the brain, and in turn, secreted signals that caused inflammation of the nerve cells.

This process resulted in the degeneration of said nerve cells, a feature that typically characterizes PD.

"It turns out, however, that microglia do not express LRRK2, nor do T cells that infiltrate the brain. This lead us to think that neuroinflammation is likely triggered by altered peripheral immune signaling,” adds Kozina.

These results provide, for the first time, an insight into how frequent LRRK2 mutations can mediate the development of Parkinson’s.